It's a nice catch by Investors Business Daily's John Merline, but not exactly a shock to anyone who understood the real dynamics of the uninsured before ObamaCare. Advocates for a government-imposed overhaul of the health-care industry regularly decried the 47 million uninsured at that time (now 48 million) as if it was a monolithic bloc of people clamoring for insurance but who had no way to access it. Now, their own surveys show that half of their target market has no interest in health insurance anyway:

Let's leave aside for a minute the oddity of this effort. Its backers have endlessly touted ObamaCare as a miracle of modern government that will at long last bring insurance within reach of 48 million people who desperately want it. Besides, the law mandates that everyone buy ObamaCare coverage.

So why the need for a big marketing push at all?

Once you look at the marketing slides the HHS has produced, you find the answer.

It turns out that the Democrats and the Obama administration apparently didn’t bother to investigate who these uninsured people actually are before they forced through a $1.8 trillion plan to help them.

What they’ve learned since is that more than half of the 48 million who the government says are uninsured aren’t interested in health insurance, which is why they don’t bother to buy it in the first place.

The administration now admits that vast numbers of the uninsured will be unlikely to respond to ObamaCare’s marketing pitches.

Health insurance coverage is likely to be underreported on the Current Population Survey (CPS). While underreporting affects most, if not all, surveys, underreporting of health insurance coverage in the Annual Social and Economic Supplement (ASEC) appears to be a larger problem than in other national surveys that ask about insurance. Some reasons for the disparity may include the fact that income, not health insurance, is the main focus of the ASEC questionnaire. In addition, the ASEC collects health insurance information by asking in February through April about the previous years coverage Compared with other national surveys, the CPS estimate of the number of people without health insurance more closely approximates the number of people who are uninsured at a specific point in time during the year than the number of people uninsured for the entire year.

The actual number of Americans uninsured for significant periods by reasons other than choice was less than a third of the claimed number — just 14 million. The rest didn’t buy insurance because they just didn’t need it. Most of those who wanted insurance but couldn’t access it had poverty as the cause rather than any other issue, although pre-existing conditions played a part in this as well. The proper response to a problem of this scope — about 4.2% of the population — should have been to find ways to lower costs through competition, improved pricing signals by discouraging the third-party-payer model for routine health care, and expansion of existing safety-net programs to support the truly needy.

Had we done that, HHS wouldn’t have to create sales pitches for systemic overhauls that force Americans into plans they never wanted in the first place, whose structures actually increase costs and exacerbate the very problems that drive those increases. Those of us who actually researched the nature and the diverse backgrounds of the uninsured knew exactly that this would be the outcome of the top-down, one-size-fits-all approach that two-thirds of the target market had already rejected.

Unfortunately, that class of researchers didn’t include the majority in Congress, but then again, they had other motivations for their insistence on dictating outcomes for the health-care industry.

Very true, but Obamacare was never about helping anyone, it was about gaining a greater measure of control over everyone’s lives. And maybe even a vehicle for getting rid of all of us “old folks” before we cost them much money.

Very true, but Obamacare was never about helping anyone, it was about gaining a greater measure of control over everyones lives. And maybe even a vehicle for getting rid of all of us old folks before we cost them much money.

Exactly. What better way to reduce the Social Security and Medicare rolls.

The elderly Elite/Oligarchs will have no worries.

7
posted on 04/04/2013 1:50:56 PM PDT
by laplata
(The Answer To 1984 Is 1776)

For some people, who are getting along just fine with a minimalist lifestyle, the mandatory insurance premiums will soak up nearly half their income. that will force them to choose between food and shelter; or prison for not paying the premiums and fines.

9
posted on 04/04/2013 2:11:41 PM PDT
by Chuckster
(The longer I live the less I care about what you think.)

This sh*t reminds me of Bill Crosby stating that the reason so many in the 'hood were undereducated was because Mom and Dad always had a spare $200 to buy them the latest Air Jordon shoes but couldn't come up with $40 to buy them a "Hooked On Phonics" book and CD set.

My daughter made a similar observation about families with autistic kids which she had to visit regularly to ensure they would continue to get their government checks.

Less than one-third were actually interested in doing anything to actually help their kids. Without exception, they all had the latest X-Box, Play Station or other video gaming system which, for an autistic kid, is like giving an alcoholic a high priced bottle of rye whiskey. They also had multiple big screen teevees blaring in almost every room in the house.

The third actually interested in helping their kids discovered miraculous transformations by simply reading a book out loud, playing a board game with the family, taking them to a park and tossing a Frisbee or playing whiffle ball in the backyard.

The other two-thirds weren't interested in hearing such suggestions. They didn't have the time. Of course, they always found the time for other activities which I would be denounced as bigoted and judgmental if I were to divulge further details.

11
posted on 04/04/2013 2:29:15 PM PDT
by Vigilanteman
(Obama: Fake black man. Fake Messiah. Fake American. How many fakes can you fit in one Zer0?)

Disclaimer:
Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual
posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its
management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the
exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.